News Room

A collection of press releases, audio content and media clips featuring INFORMS members and their research.

New Research Showcases Pivotal Shift Toward Energy Democracy
News Release

BALTIMORE, MD, November 12, 2024 – New research in the INFORMS journal Manufacturing & Service Operations Management is guiding the development of more inclusive and efficient electricity markets. The work demonstrates how aggregating small-scale, distributed energy resources (DERs) like solar panels can effectively balance the power of large utility companies.

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What Trump's win means for retail giants like Walmart, Target, and Costco
Media Coverage

Donald Trump's return to the White House is likely to usher in sweeping changes that affect retailers such as Walmart, Target, and Costco — from new tariffs to tax cuts and a new regulatory environment.

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A New Light at Intersections Could Help Louisiana Traffic Flow
Media Coverage

NEW ORLEANS, La. (KPEL News) - Louisiana intersections might one day look different, with the familiar red, yellow, and green lights potentially gaining a new color: white.

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An audio journey of how data and analytics save lives, save money and solve problems.

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How to Block COVID's Spread From Schools to the Community

How to Block COVID's Spread From Schools to the Community

District Administration, August 19, 2020

Creating student cohorts of limited size is an effective way that school administrators can stem COVID-19 transmissions when classrooms reopen for in-person instruction, says one expert who has studied how the coronavirus could spread from schools to communities. That means reducing a class of 20 that meets every day to 10 students who come to school twice a week, for example, while also ensuring strict social distancing and sanitization, says Pinar Keskinocak, a systems engineering professor at the Georgia Institute of Technology and director of the Center for Health and Humanitarian Systems.

Cellphone Data Shows How Las Vegas Is “Gambling With Lives” Across the Country

Cellphone Data Shows How Las Vegas Is “Gambling With Lives” Across the Country

Prescott eNews, August 25, 2020

ProPublica is a nonprofit newsroom that investigates abuses of power. Sign up to receive our biggest stories as soon as they’re published. When it comes to COVID-19, what happens in Vegas doesn’t stay in Vegas. Las Vegas casinos reopened June 4, and they have become a likely hotbed for the spread of the novel coronavirus, public health experts said. But if tourists return home and then test positive for COVID-19, the limitations of contact tracing in the midst of a pandemic make it unlikely such an outbreak would be identified.

If the University of Illinois Can't Prevail Over COVID-19, No Other Big University Will Be Able to Either

If the University of Illinois Can't Prevail Over COVID-19, No Other Big University Will Be Able to Either

Chicago Sun Times, August 24, 2020

The University of North Carolina abandoned in-person classes at the first sign of infections on campus. The University of Notre Dame and Michigan State punted even before they got started. There are dozens of large institutions planning to hold in-person education, while the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign is using a hybrid model, mixing in-person and on-line classes. Can the U. of I. succeed where so many others have and will fail?

Stocked Out: Why Cleaning Product Supply Chains Struggle to Meet Demand

Stocked Out: Why Cleaning Product Supply Chains Struggle to Meet Demand

Supply Chain Dive, August 20, 2020

When schools and nonessential offices closed this spring, the need for cleaning supplies (and toilet paper) shifted from the institution to the home. Consumers snapped up cleaning products seconds after they arrived on store shelves, if they arrived at all. Cleaning and disinfectant product manufacturers, and their retail customers, are continually out of stock and unable to keep up with the demand, said Howard Bochnek, VP of technology and scientific affairs at American Infection Control, a company developing and licensing disinfectants.

Who Will Get the First Doses of a Coronavirus Vaccine? Johns Hopkins Experets Have Some Ideas

Who Will Get the First Doses of a Coronavirus Vaccine? Johns Hopkins Experets Have Some Ideas

The Baltimore Sun, August 20, 2020

The development of vaccines for the coronavirus is moving along, but there is widespread agreement among public health officials that there won’t be enough doses initially for everyone. How should the initially scarce, potentially life-saving vaccines be distributed? The Johns Hopkins Center for Health Security released a suggested framework for vaccine distribution, though the decision will be up to the federal government, which is buying several hundred million doses.

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